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Brick Lane by Monica Ali
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Brick Lane

by Monica Ali

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
2,98474946 (3.48)110
Info:

Scribner (2004), Kindle Edition, 432 pages

Member:smarks2008
Collections:Your libraryRating:****
Tags:realistic fiction, London, Bangladesh, women roles, Islam, relationships, read 2009
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English (69)  French (3)  Norwegian (1)  Swedish (1)  All languages (74)
Showing 1-5 of 69 (next | show all)
I did not enjoy the first half of this book at all, but I couldn't figure out why. Something about the story just didn't work for me. The second half picked up and did get better, but it is still not a story I'd likely revisit. ( )
  ascgrrl | Dec 14, 2009 |
It's a few years old now and there has been a film (that I have not seen). I believe there was some controversy around the film but I don't remember exactly why - I think Germaine greer was annoyed by it. I liked the book - it's not the greatest work of literature ever, but it is interesting and slightly confronting on issues of race, religion, gender, terrorism and the migrant experience.
1 vote booksofcolor | Aug 1, 2009 |
Novel,Not the best though ( )
  zasmine | Jul 11, 2009 |
A book that keeps coming back to me. This is the story of a Nazneen an 18 year old Bangladeshi girl who is brought to the UK to marry a man 20 years older than her.

It's interesting seeing such a familiar place as London from a totally different angle. I found it a really engaging story. ( )
1 vote stephenmakin | Jul 7, 2009 |
Found it very slow; consequently didn't finish it.
  Phyl123 | Jun 17, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 69 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
'Sternly, remorselessly, fate guides each of us; only at the beginning, when we're absorbed in details, in all sorts of nonsense, in ourselves, are we unaware of its harsh hand.' - Ivan Turgenev
'A man's character is his fate.' - Heraclitus
Dedication
For Abba, with love
First words
An hour and forty-five minutes before Nazneen's life began - began as it would proceed for quite some time, that is to say uncertainly - her mother Rupban felt an iron fist squeeze her belly.
Quotations
Chanu stopped and looked in a shop window.'Seventy five pounds for that little bag. You couldn't fit even one book into it.'
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0743243315, Paperback)

Wildly embraced by critics, readers, and contest judges (who put it on the short-list for the 2003 Man Booker Prize), Brick Lane is indeed a rare find: a book that lives up to its hype. Monica Ali's debut novel chronicles the life of Nazneen, a Bangladeshi girl so sickly at birth that the midwife at first declares her stillborn. At 18 her parents arrange a marriage to Chanu, a Bengali immigrant living in England. Although Chanu--who's twice Nazneen's age--turns out to be a foolish blowhard who "had a face like a frog," Nazneen accepts her fate, which seems to be the main life lesson taught by the women in her family. "If God wanted us to ask questions," her mother tells her, "he would have made us men." Over the next decade-and-a-half Nazneen grows into a strong, confident woman who doesn't defy fate so much as bend it to her will. The great delight to be had in Brick Lane lies with Ali's characters, from Chanu the kindly fool to Mrs. Islam the elderly loan shark to Karim the political rabblerouser, all living in a hothouse of Bengali immigrants. Brick Lane combines the wide scope of a social novel about the struggles of Islamic immigrants in pre- and post-9/11 England with the intimate story of Nazneen, one of the more memorable heroines to come along in a long time. If Dickens or Trollope were loosed upon contemporary London, this is exactly the sort of novel they would cook up. --Claire Dederer

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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